August 2022         
Today's Date: July 2, 2024
Freedmen’s Town Community Investment Initiative Launches   •   World's Largest Swimming Lesson™ (#WLSL2024) Kicks Off First Day of Summer with Global Event Teaching Kids and Parents How   •   Carín León's Socios Music Forms Global Partnership with Virgin Music Group and Island Records   •   Media Advisory: Arvest Bank Awards $15,000 CARE Award to University District Development Corp.   •   Lifezone Metals Announces Voting Results from its 2024 Annual General Meeting   •   Travel Industry Professional Women Gather for Third Annual Women in Travel THRIVE at HSMAI Day of Impact 2024   •   Media Advisory: Federal Housing Finance Agency Director Sandra Thompson Visits Affordable Apartment Complex in Dallas   •   Melmark Receives $30M Gift to Fuel Services for Individuals with Autism, Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities   •   REI Systems Awarded $6M Contract from U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs for its Grants Management Solution   •   PARAMOUNT GLOBAL, NICKELODEON AND DCMP FORM MULTI-YEAR PARTNERSHIP TO MAKE BRANDS' GLOBALLY BELOVED KIDS' PROGRAMMING ACCESSIBLE   •   Survey of Nation's Mayors Highlights City Efforts to Support LGBTQ+ Residents   •   Martina Navratilova, Riley Gaines, Donna de Varona, Jennifer Sey Join Female Athletes For Rally in Washington, DC to "Take Back   •   The V Foundation for Cancer Research Announces 2024 Recipients for A Grant of Her Own: The Women Scientists Innovation Award for   •   Maximus Named a Top Washington-Area Workplace by The Washington Post   •   Black-Owned Pharmacy Startup in St. Louis Combines Services of Walgreens and Amazon to Address Pharmacy Desert Crisis   •   Susan G. Komen® Warns of Dire Impact from Braidwood Management, Inc. et al. v. Xavier Becerra et al. Ruling That Will Force   •   Produced by Renegade Film Productions/Chameleon Multimedia, Obscure Urban Legend ‘Sweaty Larry’ to Be Invoked for Fi   •   Chinatown Storytelling Centre Opens New Exhibit: Neighbours: From Pender to Hastings   •   Shop, Sip, and Support Social Justice Programs at Five Keys Furniture Annex in Stockton, California, on Saturday, June 22nd from   •   SCOTUS Ruling in Rahimi Case Upholds Protections for Domestic Violence Survivors, BWJP Experts Celebrate
Bookmark and Share

HEALTH CARE REFORM 'MIGHT NOT BE ENOUGH' FOR MINORITES

 

MINNEAPOLIS,  -- The national health care reform package signed by President Obama recently promises to significantly reduce the number of uninsured Americans. According to the Congressional Budget Office, 31 million Americans who are currently uninsured will gain health care coverage under the federal legislation. While health insurance coverage is a key factor in ensuring that consumers get the health care services they need, it may not be enough. As found in a recent study by MN Community Measurement, even when patients have health insurance, if they are of lower socioeconomic status or are persons of color, there is a persistent gap between their health status and the health status of other patients.

For the past three years, MN Community Measurement, a nonprofit organization with a mission to measure and publicly report health care quality information, has assessed the gap between the rate at which physicians achieve health care "best practices" for their patients enrolled in state-funded health insurance programs such as Medical Assistance or MinnesotaCare (called Minnesota Health Care Programs patients in the report), and the rate at which they achieve those "best practices" for their patients who have insurance through an employer or through Medicare managed care. Compared with the overall population in Minnesota, patients who are enrolled in the state-funded Minnesota Health Care Programs are more likely to have a lower socioeconomic status and to be persons of color, American Indians, persons with disabilities and elders. MN Community Measurement conducts this work under a contract with the Department of Human Services. The third annual report issued this week indicates that, although there has been a reduction of that gap on nine of ten measures over the last three years, the gap persists. The report is available on the organization's website atwww.mncm.org.

"We are making progress," said Jim Chase, president of MN Community Measurement, "but it is slow because there is no easy fix. Our conclusion is we need to do more than just treat everyone the same and hope they benefit from the improvements in care. To really get at the gaps, we need also to target interventions specifically at those patients who have socioeconomic, racial or cultural factors in play that are affecting their health status." Some groups, including HealthEast, achieved higher than average rates in applying best practices to their patients enrolled in state-funded health care plans on some measures, such as optimal diabetes care, controlling blood pressure, and treatment of colds and sore throats without unnecessary prescription antibiotics. On some of those measures, such as optimal diabetes care, medical groups such as HealthEast not only had a higher than average rate in achieving best practices, but also had a smaller than average gap between their patients who are enrolled in state-funded health plans and their patients who have insurance coverage through an employer or Medicare managed care.

To help health care providers target their interventions, for the first time, MN Community Measurement has also taken a closer look at the gap by comparing the care provided to patients of different racial groups. A statewide look at differences between racial groups reveals, for example, that American Indians are the least likely to achieve health care best practices in four of the ten measures: optimal diabetes care, controlling high blood pressure, receiving appropriate screening for cervical cancer and receiving appropriate childhood immunizations. Patients of Asian descent are the least likely to receive appropriate colorectal cancer screenings.

HealthPartners is among the medical groups most often achieving not only a high rate of achieving best practices for patients enrolled in state-funded health plans but also reducing the gap between this population and their commercially insured patients. They identify as one key element of their success the fact that they have been using their electronic health record system to record patients' race and language preference. They use that information to make sure they have an interpreter available to participate in an upcoming appointment or to plan for health education in the patient's preferred language. HealthPartners Clinics also have instituted a system that generates automatic reminders for patients to come in for preventive screenings, such as a colonoscopy, mammogram or PAP test. "We have made reducing health disparities a top priority," said Dr. Beth Averbeck, Associate Medical Director of HealthPartners, "and have customized our care plans to address the unique health care needs of specific patient groups. For example, we recently launched an initiative aimed at saving lives by providing colorectal cancer screening at an earlier age for African American patients. Organizations such as the American College of Gastroenterology and the Institute for Clinical Systems Improvement recommend that regular colorectal cancer screening for African Americans should begin at age 45, compared to age 50 for other races."

About MN Community Measurement

MN Community Measurement is a nonprofit organization dedicated to improving the quality of health care in Minnesota by publicly reporting quality results. Founded by Minnesota's health plans and the Minnesota Medical Association, MN Community Measurement is a collaborative that works with health plans, medical groups and physicians, employers and consumers to spur quality improvement, reduce health care costs and increase the value of health care.

 

SOURCE MN Community Measurement

 



Back to top
| Back to home page
Video

White House Live Stream
LIVE VIDEO EVERY SATURDAY
alsharpton Rev. Al Sharpton
9 to 11 am EST
jjackson Rev. Jesse Jackson
10 to noon CST


Video

LIVE BROADCASTS
Sounds Make the News ®
WAOK-Urban
Atlanta - WAOK-Urban
KPFA-Progressive
Berkley / San Francisco - KPFA-Progressive
WVON-Urban
Chicago - WVON-Urban
KJLH - Urban
Los Angeles - KJLH - Urban
WKDM-Mandarin Chinese
New York - WKDM-Mandarin Chinese
WADO-Spanish
New York - WADO-Spanish
WBAI - Progressive
New York - WBAI - Progressive
WOL-Urban
Washington - WOL-Urban

Listen to United Natiosns News